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What started out as a vehicle for promoting Italian furniture makers in the 1960s soon exploded into the world’s biggest international showcase for design. Today, over 2,500 companies and 300,000 visitors from 160 countries congregate in Milan, the city known for its fashion and football, to spot trends, strike deals and mingle.
While many of the city’s upper-crust neighborhoods host scattered events and installations as part of the Milan Design Week effort today, the Salone Internazionale del Mobile (or Milan Furniture Fair in English) located outside of the city remains the core of the festivities. We spent a day walking the nearly 4,000,000 square feet of exhibition space for a taste of the latest in home and office furniture design keeping the famous words of Milan’s most famous resident designer, Leonardo da Vinci, top of mind. La semplicità è l’ultima sofisticazione — simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.
The Search for the Next Great Designer

At an event dominated by the most established players in the industry, Lexus is helping foster the next generation of designers through their annual Design Awards. Since 2012, the initiative has encouraged both students and aspiring professionals to submit project ideas that align with each year’s theme for the opportunity to bring their concepts to life while working alongside legendary mentors.
Of the thousands of applications submitted for this year’s “senses” theme, 12 finalists were chosen to show their ideas in Milan as part of the Lexus’ design experience. Four projects in this group were awarded up to 2.5 million yen to cover the costs of prototype production and were provided with three months of mentoring from established experts like furniture designer Max Lamb and video game designer Robin Hunicke.